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Published byJosephine Cooper Modified over 9 years ago
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secede verb To pull away from or withdraw from an organization or government The Southern states voted to secede from the rest of the United States, which became a catalyst for the Civil War.
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cotton gin noun a machine that separates the seeds, hulls, and foreign material from cotton Northern industrialists preferred the cotton gin because it reduced the need for slave labor on cotton plantations.
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Confederacy Proper noun The 11 southern states that seceded from the United States in 1861 – 1865 General Lee was the military leader for the Confederacy.
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Union Proper noun The federal union of states that remained during the American Civil War after the Confederacy seceded Abraham Lincoln felt the Union must be preserved at all costs, even if it meant civil war.
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abolitionist noun A person who supports abolishing, or getting rid of, something – particularly slavery Quakers, who are against slavery because of their religion, are natural abolitionists.
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carpet bagger noun A northerner in the south after the Civil War who sought private gain during Reconstruction (named for the carpet bag he often carried in his travels) Newly freed slaves often fell prey to the schemes of traveling carpet baggers, giving them money in exchange for items or promises they never received.
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deserter noun A person who runs away or deserts his or her military unit to avoid service Deserters in the Civil War were often rounded up and put in prisons with enemy prisoners of war.
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amnesty noun the act of an authority (as a government) by which pardon is granted to a large group of individuals Even though they had broken the law of the South, escaped slaves were granted amnesty in the North after the Emancipation Proclamation.
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emancipation noun To be free from restraint or control by another Abolitionists sought emancipation for slaves who worked the Southern plantations.
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segregation noun The practice or policy of keeping a group separate or segregated, commonly by race Despite their emancipation, freed slaves in the South continued to be subject to segregation.
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surrender verb To give oneself up to the power of another Robert E. Lee surrendered the Confederacy at Appomattox Court house, ending the Civil War in 1865.
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auction block noun The pedestal on which things to be auctioned stand, including slaves prior to the Civil War When slaves first arrived from Africa they were put on the auction block in a public area and sold to the highest bidder.
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